The 2013 Citizen Promaster Altichron

This is the way any normal watch aficionado behaves: while very young he’s attracted by digital and quartz watches. As the years go by he begins to dream of mechanical watches (and Swiss ones)…then, when he starts earning some money, he fulfills his dream of adding one or more luxury watches to his collection. I don’t think I’ve reversed these tendencies but I am beginning to follow two parallel directions: the Swiss school, with its history and tradition of fine and complicated watchmaking, and the Japanese one of
advanced technology
and
electronics
. But hey... Japanese manufacture is just as good in fine mechanical watchmaking as Swiss manufacture and their achievements, but Japanese technological innovations in the field of electronic and quartz watches give them a clear leadership in this sector.
Citizen
, to cite just one important Japanese brand, is one of the largest producers of watches in the world and can boast of an endless series of primacies and patents. In Basel they have presented a new series of watches within the
Promaster
range, called
Altichron
:

Altichron
is not a new name, and neither is the
Promaster
family, known to all professional divers and fans of multiple use watches
.
Launched in the 80s, together with
Aqualand
and
Aerochron
, it completed the series of
Citizen
sports watches:

One of the features of
Altichron
was its ability to measure
pressure
and
altitude
(from
-300
m to
+5000
m), extremely useful functions for mountain climbers or simply lovers of the latest technical “gizmos”. Enclosed in the typical case of a
Citizen
sports watch: the measuring sensor located at 9 o’clock and all the functions at
2
,
4
,
8
and
10
o’clock, respectively. In 2013
Citizen
presents its new
Citizen Promaster
Altichron
, water resistant up to 200 m, with compass and
altimeter
(without a barometer). What strikes you immediately is the watch’s design. To describe it as masterful is an oversimplification: though vaguely reminiscent of the first
Promaster Altichro
n it is
much more
attractive
, has a decidedly
original look
and a wholly
original stylistic approach
. It is of such high quality that it raises the standards of the Promaster family.And with the complete disappearance of any sort of digital display! It’s a
100% analogic watch
! If you look at the dial, the four concentric spheres call to mind another little known but very beautiful watch produced in limited series by A. Dunhill many years ago, the
Pentagraph A-Centric
:

The style of the
Citizen Promaster Altichron
however is typically high-tech - aeronautical spheres, open work and colored like the reference scale to ease the reading of such a busy dial. The first level is for the hours, minutes and seconds: in a word, the
Citizen Promaster
Altichron
is a
5 hands watch
(actually 6 if you consider the one at 9 o’clock)
.
The dial is a triumph of information: the functions offered by the
Citizen Promaster Altichron
are many and the logic is complex, in other words this is a computer, to the point that attempting to describe it in a single article would be impossible…the reader would run away. But if you do want to know a bit more about it,
bear with me
!
MOVEMENT:
An
Eco-Drive
, which means that it charges with
natural light by means of a photovoltaic cell placed underneath the dial, according to a specific table that links the period of exposure to light to the duration of the recharge.

The power reserve indicator is at 9 o’clock on a scale divided into four sectors, from
0
to
340
days. If the watch has little charge left (indicator in first sector) the measuring functions are hampered.

ALTIMETER:
Activated and deactivated by pressing the button at 8 o’clock, the reading is obtained with three hands; the indications are based on
1000
,
100
,
2.5
m. Thanks to the graduated exterior scale the power reserve dial provides altitudes from
1,000
to
10,000
meters:

The dial at the center provides the altitude from
-300
to
900
m:

The dial underneath the
rehaut
indicates altitudes from
-97,5
to
97,5
m:

COMPASS:
First of all the watch must be kept on a horizontal level, as recommended by Citizen! By once again pressing the button at 10 0’clock the operation is reset. Here is a
Citizen
corporate video demonstrating the measurement operations:

I’ll stop now, hoping that someone has had the patience to read this far, and try to summarize my experience with the
Citizen Promaster Altichron
: Citizen has created a watch that is absolutely
original
,
technologically advanced
and with an absolutely
innovative
design
. It has the beauty of a mechanical watch but its interior is representative of the best in Japanese technology
.
This particular
Citizen
model is a
high-tech
“astronaut” instrument-watch, given its generous size, softened by the lightness of titanium, the very soft rubber watch band and the silence of its movement so reminiscent of the total absence of sound transmission in space. Everything works perfectly, to the last detail, but I must confess that I chose it solely for its design and its finish: and there is only one thing I can say about the faceted double barbed buckle, satin finished outside and glossy on the inside…
WOW
!

What would I improve? With all this perfection only one detail clashes: the numbers on the calendar. The
20
th
and
21
st
day, for example, have the first digit in a different character, and amidst all that perfection, it was one thing I just could not understand. As for the rest, as I already wrote in my first article on the
Citizen Promaster Altichron (Cirrus)
after Baselworld 2013 and that you can read
here
,
Citizen
is launching a series of models that are tremendously cool and destined to set the standard for all others!